With Launchpad's Personal Package Archives (PPA), you can build and publish binary Ubuntu packages for multiple architectures simply by uploading an Ubuntu source package to Launchpad. Every individual and team in Launchpad gets their own PPA.

Your PPA gives you:

With Launchpad's Personal Package Archives (PPA), you can build and publish binary Ubuntu packages for multiple architectures simply by uploading an Ubuntu source package to Launchpad. Every individual and team in Launchpad can have one or more PPAs

Before you can start using a PPA, whether it's your own or it belongs to a team, you need to activate it on your [[https://launchpad.net/people/+me/|profile page]] or the team's overview page.

Before you can start using a PPA, whether it's your own or it belongs to a team, you need to activate it on your [[https://launchpad.net/people/+me/|profile page]] or the team's overview page. If you already have one or more PPAs, this is also where you'll be able to create additional archives.

Change the first line to whatever name you want to use to refer to your PPA, while retaining the square brackets.If you're uploading to a team PPA, change the ```~your-launchpad-id``` to your team's Launchpad name (maintaining the tilde). As you might expect, you must be a member of the team before you can upload to its PPA.

You'll need to:

* Change the first line to whatever name you want to use to refer to your PPA, while retaining the square brackets. * If you're uploading to a team PPA, change the ```~your-launchpad-id``` to your team's Launchpad name (maintaining the tilde). As you might expect, you must be a member of the team before you can upload to its PPA. * Change the incoming entry to the path to the PPA you're working with.

Overview

With Launchpad's Personal Package Archives (PPA), you can build and publish binary Ubuntu packages for multiple architectures simply by uploading an Ubuntu source package to Launchpad. Every individual and team in Launchpad can have one or more PPAs

PPAs give you:

An APT repository of up to 1 gigabyte for free software - see our PPA terms of use for more detail.

Binary packages built for x86, AMD64 and LPIA architectures against Ubuntu.

A web front-end where Launchpad users can browse and search for your packages.

Installing and uninstalling software from a PPA is just as easy as installing software from Ubuntu's primary archive. This makes it an ideal way to distribute beta versions, daily builds and other versions of your software for testing, without having to ask your testers to compile your software from source.

Packages you publish in your PPA will remain there until you remove them, they're superseded by another package that you upload or the version of Ubuntu against which they're built becomes obsolete.

Activating a PPA

Before you can start using a PPA, whether it's your own or it belongs to a team, you need to activate it on your profile page or the team's overview page. If you already have one or more PPAs, this is also where you'll be able to create additional archives.

You can only activate your PPA if you have signed the Ubuntu code of conduct.

Your PPA's key

Launchpad generates a unique key for each PPA and uses it to sign any packages built in that PPA.

This means that people downloading/installing packages from your PPA can verify their source. After you've activated your PPA, it can take a couple of hours for Launchpad to generate your key.

Installing software from a PPA

PPAs work like normal Ubuntu archives. You can install software in the usual way -- for example, through apt-get or synaptic -- and whenever there's an update Ubuntu will prompt you to install it.

Adding a PPA to your Ubuntu repositories

To install packages from a PPA, you need to tell Ubuntu where to find it. You do this by giving Ubuntu the PPA's URL, which you can find on the PPA's overview page.

Let's take a look at the AWN Testing team's PPA as an example. If you're using the most recent development version of Ubuntu, all you need do is copy these lines in the apt sources.list entries section of the page. For example:

If, like most people, you're using another version of Ubuntu -- such as the most recent stable version -- then you need to select that version from the drop-down box. That'll automatically update the URLs you need to copy.

Adding a PPA's keys to your system

Each PPA has its own unique key that is used to sign the packages in that archive. This lets you know that:

the packages you're downloading haven't been altered since Launchpad built them

you are downloading from the PPA you wanted.

Important: You download and install PPA packages at your own risk. Ubuntu, Launchpad and Canonical do not endorse these packages. You must be certain that you trust the PPA owner before you install their software.

Until you add the PPA's key to your own system, you'll see warnings that you're downloading from an untrusted source. If you trust the PPA owner, add the PPA's key to your system.

Replace B0BE17C2A0C914F086B7B8327D2C7A23BF810CD5 with the fingerprint of the PPA key you're dealing with.

Building your source package

Before you start using your PPA to distribute software, you need to be familiar with building .deb source packages for Ubuntu. The best place to learn how to package for Ubuntu is the Ubuntu packaging guide.

You should also ensure that the email address and GPG key you use with dput are the same as those associated with your Launchpad account.

There are a couple of aspects of PPAs that work slightly differently to standard Ubuntu packages:versioning and dependencies.

Let's take a look at each in detail.

Versioning

Ubuntu package names are suffixed by the version number of the package. This allows Ubuntu to distinguish newer packages from older ones and so remain up to date.

If you're creating an alternative version of a package already available in Ubuntu's repositories, you should ensure that:

your package supersedes the official Ubuntu version

future Ubuntu versions will supersede your package.

To do this, increase the Ubuntu version number and add a suffix of ~ppan (where n is your package's revision number).

For example: you're creating an experimental version of the myapp_1.0-1 package. Your PPA package would be named myapp_1.0-2~ppa1.

Here, the tilde knocks the precedence of the package down to below whatever is in front of it. So, for now, this package counts as being a higher version number than myapp_1.0-1 but when Ubuntu releases myapp_1.0-2 that will supersede your PPA version.

Version numbers must be unique. This has implications if you want to provide packages for multiple Ubuntu series at once:

If your package can be used on different versions of Ubuntu without being recompiled then use the naming scheme already described. When you have successfully uploaded your package to your PPA you can copy the existing binaries to the new series; see Copying packages below.

If your package does need to be recompiled to support multiple Ubuntu series, then you should add a suffix of the series name to the version number. So a package for the Intrepid Ibex could be named myapp_1.0-2~ppa1~intrepid1 and for the Hardy Heron myapp_1.0-2~ppa1~hardy1. If you need to release an updated package, increment the ~ppan suffix. It is important to note that specifying the version name here doesn't change the series that you are targetting; this must still be set correctly as described in the Ubuntu packaging guide's section on the changelog file.

Dependencies

Launchpad satisfies your package's Build-Depends using:

the most recent versions of the packages in the PPA you're uploading to

Note: If you're already familiar with uploading to the Ubuntu primary archive, you should note that PPA builds do not have any build dependency restrictions, unlike a build in the primary Ubuntu archive. If you want to build the same package in the primary Ubuntu archive at a later point you may need to revise the package's component and/or pocket.

Depending on other PPAs

If you want Launchpad to satisfy your package dependencies using one or more other PPAs, follow the Edit dependencies link on your PPA or the team's overview page.

Building

How you build your package depends on whether you're creating a brand new package or you're creating a derivative of a package that's already in Ubuntu's primary archive.

If you're creating an alternative version of a package that's already in Ubuntu's primary archive, you don't need to upload the .orig.tar.gz file, i.e. the original source.

So, the debuild options you'd use are:

alternative version of an existing package (will be uploaded without the .orig.tar.gz file):debuild -S -sd

brand new package with no existing version in Ubuntu's repositories (will be uploaded with the .orig.tar.gz file):debuild -S -sa

Note: If you get the error clearsign failed: secret key not available when signing the changes file, use an additional option -k[key_id] when calling debuild. Use gpg --list-keys to get the key ID. Look for a line like "pub 12345/12ABCDEF"; the part after the slash is the key ID.

Uploading

Dput is the tool you use to upload your source package to Launchpad. It uploads the following files:

.dsc

.changes

.diff.gz

and optionally the .orig.tar.gz (if you used debuild -S -sa to build your package)

First, you need to tell dput where to send your package and by what method. To do that, edit ~/.dput.cf to look like this:

Change the first line to whatever name you want to use to refer to your PPA, while retaining the square brackets.

If you're uploading to a team PPA, change the ~your-launchpad-id to your team's Launchpad name (maintaining the tilde). As you might expect, you must be a member of the team before you can upload to its PPA.

Change the incoming entry to the path to the PPA you're working with.

Next, open a terminal and enter the following:

$ dput my-ppa P_V_source.changes

Replace P with the package name and V with the version number. Non-standard changesfile names will result in a silent upload failed, since the uploader processor cannot establish a reliable reference to the uploader.

Using packages from other distributions

You can use your PPA to build sources from other distributions that use .deb packages.

Create a new dput configuration section using incoming = ~<lp_name>/ppa/ubuntu/<a ubuntu suite> and the suite you specify will override the suite named in the upload changelog when you upload it using the new configuration:

$ dput my-ppa-force-hardy P_V_source.changes

You can upload a source from any Debian-compatible distribution straight to your PPA with no changes required and it will be built and published in the targeted ubuntu suite.

Important: Although Launchpad will attempt to build the package, it may not be able to meet all of the dependencies of a source created for another a distribution.

Copying packages

You can copy packages from other PPAs into any PPA that you can upload to. You also have the option of copying packages between distro-series (i.e different distribution releases).

select the destination PPA - you must have upload permission for that archive

specify the destination series

choose whether or not to also copy the related binary package.

As soon as you request the copy, the source will be listed in your PPA with details of it origin. However, it can take up to twenty minutes for the files to actually appear in your archive.

If you only copy the source, the corresponding build records are created in the destination PPA immediately.

Deleting packages

You can delete any package from your PPA. However, it can take some time before the package is removed from the listing on your PPA overview page and the reported size of your archive is adjusted.

The deletion page allows you to schedule packages for deletion. To do this, search first for the desired packages, select one of more of them, input a comment, and request deletion. Deletion will affect the source selected and any binary packages built from it.

Deletion marks the packages as deleted in the UI, but they are actually removed from your PPA in separate steps:

Archive indexes: A deleted package disappears from the archive indexes in at most 20 minutes. As soon as this happens, users will no longer be able to install it via apt.

Files on disk: A file will be removed from the archive disk pool only when all packages referencing it have been scheduled for deletion. This includes packages published in other series, or multiple package versions referring to the same original upstream tarball.

The archive removal job runs every 30 minutes. It may take some time to remove a file from disk, depending on the number of packages referencing it. In the most common situation, files are removed within an hour.

Because of these conditions, the easiest alternative to replace a broken source is always to upload a package with a higher version number and let the system automatically supersede and remove the older version. You should not rely on deletion requests to re-upload the same source version with different contents.

Frequently asked questions

What limits apply to the PPA service?Other than the expectation that packages in your PPA are free software, we do ask that you not abuse the build system with unnecessary builds or automated uploads of large numbers of packages. We will monitor the total amount of build time per user and ask folks to be reasonable in their use of the shared resources in the PPA pool. Developers and teams each start with 1 gigabyte of storage space freely available in their PPA's for source and binary packages. We will not accept uploads of packages that are unmodified from their original source in Ubuntu or Debian, only packages that include your own changes. We ask that people include useful changelogs for each package so that users and other developers can understand what new features they are exploring in their work. Read the PPA Terms of Use for more information.

How many users can download packages from my PPA?There are no limits on the number of users you can point at your PPA. We would encourage you to build communities of users and testers around your PPA, and there are no bandwidth restrictions on downloads from any PPA.

How many PPAs can I have?Each user and team in Launchpad can have a single public PPA. If you want to have different versions of the same package, testing different features or focused on different use cases, then we would encourage you to create a new team and use the PPA for that team. That way, for example, you can have a team of people interested in "server" issues that has one version of the Apache package, and another interested in "workstation" issues that has a different version of the same package, each in a different PPA. Please don't abuse this capability!

Why are only X86, AMD64 and LPIA architectures supported?We use the Xen virtualisation system for security during the build process, ensuring that each build has a clean build environment and different developers cannot impact on one another's builds accidentally. This technology is only available for these architectures.